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BONNARD
Timothy Hyman
"A wonderful
book . . . so dazzlingly well informed, so rich and complicated, so
full of a painter's insight and intelligence, that any attempt
to paraphrase it would be an injustice."
Spectator
Bonnard
found early fame among the Nabis, the radical young disciples of Gauguin,
and went on with Vuillard to create a new intimist art of psychologically
charged interiors. But from 1900 he turned back toward Impressionism,
and his art recreates moments of heightened subjectivity, color and
space. This new account shows how these beautiful and lyrical pictures
sometimes emerged from terrible circumstances; as Bonnard himself
wrote shortly before his death in 1947, "one does not always sing
out of happiness." Bonnard's reassessment over the past thirty years
has centered on the extraordinary late pictures that were inspired
by Mallarme and Symbolism, by Jarry and anarchism, and by the philosophy
of Bergeson. These works are among some of the most enduring images
of the twentieth century.
ISBN
0-500-20310-5 · 169 illustrations
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